It seems like everybody and their mother is doing a SAR! Well so am I. I am partnering with the Association of Black Sexologists and Clinicians (ABSC) to offer our inaugural People of Color centered SAR!
This SAR is open to all. That means yes, you white person or non-identifying person of color may attend! Usually SARs are exclusive of people and communities of color, bodies of size and color, disabled bodies of color, and bodies of color in bliss and ecstasy. They are often devoid of any inclusive or realistic approach to how we as communities of color are interacting with systems, structures, institutions, and -isms.
This SAR is different! Influenced by my two decade career in the US sexuality field I have crafted a two day experience for all of us to examine what we need to build the space for ourselves and our communities that honors our values and beliefs and our growth.
Join us for this intimate (15 registrants only) and sensual (all our senses will be used!) experience in a Black owned and run community space in historica Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn. Saturday April 28 and Sunday April 29.
Register at www.BiancaLaureano.com/SAR
View the flyer below or download it at the link above!
Thursday, April 5, 2018
Friday, March 30, 2018
your last word to me ...
Im taking an intensive course w Alexis Pauline Gumbs called Daughtering in the Face of Death. I've thought a lot and have written a lot about death, dying, grief, mourning, and the process and ritual and eroticism of it all!
Now I can find a new outlet to explore death and grief. Here is my poem that Alexis guided us through where we respond to the writing prompt of "your last word to me ..." I had dedicated my course participation to my mother and to Puerto Rico. These are who are who and what I am speaking of in this poem:
your last word to me was rememory
and i knew it.
you never read Toni Morrison, but
i am your beloved first born.
it was i who made you mother. it is
me here now finding anew and
being my own universal mother.
the disease took your memory but my
body
rememories
your last word to me was libertad
and i knew i would not live
long enough to see or witness
Puerto Rican independence and
the 'decolonization' people are
constantly misusing to describe their new idea.
there's no decolonization for the puerto rican.
que viva puerto rico libre!?
your last word to me was que revolu?! and
it was so very messy
chaotic
sloppy
disruptive
and
totally d i
s
o
r
i e
n
t
ing. The wind
and water battling.
The water from above chomping at
the isla
as the water from below chomps at
la isla
who will win this battle?
they both cede
leaving Puerto Rico.
leaving puerto rico delirious and un tremendo revolu
la isla
that my mama died on and where she
donated her body to its inhabitants: her
family.
our people.
me.
Speaking of my mami:
Your last word to me was cuentame.
as the Alzheimer's that took you
at the tender age of
63
i stopped sharing stories with you
now
the only video i have
with your voice says cuentame
lo que tu dices yo lo cuento.
Now I can find a new outlet to explore death and grief. Here is my poem that Alexis guided us through where we respond to the writing prompt of "your last word to me ..." I had dedicated my course participation to my mother and to Puerto Rico. These are who are who and what I am speaking of in this poem:
your last word to me was rememory
and i knew it.
you never read Toni Morrison, but
i am your beloved first born.
it was i who made you mother. it is
me here now finding anew and
being my own universal mother.
the disease took your memory but my
body
rememories
your last word to me was libertad
and i knew i would not live
long enough to see or witness
Puerto Rican independence and
the 'decolonization' people are
constantly misusing to describe their new idea.
there's no decolonization for the puerto rican.
que viva puerto rico libre!?
your last word to me was que revolu?! and
it was so very messy
chaotic
sloppy
disruptive
and
totally d i
s
o
r
i e
n
t
ing. The wind
and water battling.
The water from above chomping at
the isla
as the water from below chomps at
la isla
who will win this battle?
they both cede
leaving Puerto Rico.
leaving puerto rico delirious and un tremendo revolu
la isla
that my mama died on and where she
donated her body to its inhabitants: her
family.
our people.
me.
Speaking of my mami:
Your last word to me was cuentame.
as the Alzheimer's that took you
at the tender age of
63
i stopped sharing stories with you
now
the only video i have
with your voice says cuentame
lo que tu dices yo lo cuento.
Labels:
#femmeInmourning,
audre lorde,
daughtering,
decolonization,
erotic power,
grief,
grieving,
puerto rico,
rememory
Thursday, March 8, 2018
Bound By Colonization: The AfrxBoricua Kinship & Courtship Practices
I was a respondent at the John's Hopkins University's History and Africana Studies Department Bound/Unbound: Contemporary Black Marriage in Research, Policy, and Practice two-day Symposium. I spoke about AfrxBoricuas: Black Puerto Ricans. Here's what I shared, my references, and my suggested citation for attributing this work. View my presentation and the keynote and first panel below. My presentation begins at 2 hour mark / where -44.32.
Citation
Laureano, Bianca. (2018, March 8). Bound By Colonization: The AfrxBoricua Kinship and Courtship Practices. [Blog Post] Retrieved from: http://latinosexuality.blogspot.com/2018/03/bound-by-colonization-afrxboricua.html.
Tera W. Hunter shares the
various ways that intimate relationships were seen on a continuum. The various
ways that enslaved Black loves built kinship, family, and marriage included terms
such as:
- “sweethearting,” a romantic relationship w some of the benefits of marriage and being single combined
- “Taking up,” a longer term relationship where the partners lived together and were monogamous
- “Cohabitation” couples shared financial resources and responsibilities, surnames, and were monogamous
- “Acting married” a term used by whites to target Black people and identify their relationships as a sign of disrespect, incapacity, failure to assimilate
Many of these forms of
loverships remain today. They also were present in colonies where other empires
who engaged in exploration and conquest; brought enslaved Africans for their
labor and bodies to exploit. One of these colonies has remained Puerto Rico: a
colony of Spain and now the United States. Puerto Rico is an archipelago.
Similar forms of kinship were explored and remain for the Puerto Rican today.
Now that Hurricanes Irma and Maria have hit, what are we prepared to do to
support and honor the displaced Puerto Rican families, kinship, and lovers?
What are the ways we can build and preserve new archives that are waterproof?
What rituals of partnership do AfrxBoricuas still practice and why are their
testimonios important for inclusion today? These questions I would like us to
ask each other and ourselves.
How many of these forms of
family, lovership, and flexible ideas of marriage, which are practiced by the
Boricua, become forms of resistance today? What is the AfraBoricua / Puerto
Rican resisting today? I believe that Puerto Ricans are resisting the continued
exploitation, colonization, forced migration, forced displacement,
assimilation, white supremacy, catholicism, and sterilization they have been
birthed into. Hunter shares that generational differences led to a shift with
younger ex-slaves moving toward legal marriage whereas elders supported more
loose forms of coupling. That same elder and ancestor wisdom is what remains
practiced in Puerto Rico.
Classic assimilation
patterns are rooted in being absorbed into the dominant culture. It has been an
area of research interest and focus for scholars in all fields of study. When
looking at the marriage and courtship practices of ex-slaves, immigrants in the
US, and colonial subjects, there is a pattern of resistance that the Puerto
Rican consistently maintains. Cohabitation in research literature in the US has
noted that cohabitating couples are unstable, harm children’s overall
educational outcomes, and are not ideal in the US. Puerto Rican children living in a
family structure that is different from the married heterosexual biological-parent
family structure do not necessarily fare worse according to the Youth Boricua
Study, a project of Columbia University’s Department of Psychiatry that
examines the experiences of Puerto Rican youth in the US and in the mainland of
Puerto Rico.
Examining
the psychiatric disorders among Puerto Rican children, researchers Olga
Santesteban-Echarri, et.al, examined responses from the Boricua Youth Study and
published findings in 2016 that demonstrated Puerto Rican children in
cohabiting families have access to community and resources; two things that are
believed to not be stable for cohabiting families. Because Puerto Ricans
embrace and practice cohabitation differently than other Latinx immigrants who
value marriage, there is no finding that shifting from a cohabiting family to a
marriage or a step-family / blended family situation results in negative
psychological experiences for Puerto Rican children. Community as resource is
what Puerto Rican’s still value.
The
pathway to citizenship also differs in comparison to other Latinx, Caribbean,
or Black immigrants. Puerto Ricans were forced citizenship in 1917 so the
pathway to citizenship via marriage is not important for the Puerto Rican. As
Hunter writes “the ultimate test of how individuals define their relationship
may have been how they acted within a community of friends, neighbors, and
kin.” Puerto Ricans on the isla, which to us is the mainland, still
practice and embrace these communal and collective forms of coupling and family
formation.
Yet citizenship for the
queer AfraBoricua is not what it seems. Between 2008-2014 Gilbert Gonzales
examined the health insurance coverage of Puerto Ricans in same gender coupling
and found that they are not able to access full forms of employee benefits such
as health insurance as cohabiting or common law couples because of homophobia
and discrimination. Puerto Rican Maternal and Infant Health Study of 2001
demonstrated that cohabiting Puerto Rican couples who pool financial
resources have been found to be just as equitable in nature as formal
marriages.
My
mother Ivette Laureano Nieves De Jesus, who died in Puerto Rico March 1, 2016,
it’s been 105 motherless weeks, shared with my sister and I often that we “did
not ever have to get married” and that we should “first live with someone to
get to know them.” She and my Papi would share the same testimony and remind us
that they left Puerto Rico together to dream bigger, explore more, and find new
paths. They seperated when I was 16 years old and divorced when I was 33
because my mother had health insurance and wanted my father to not be
uninsured. They remained family even as they shifted our family structure. When
my father remarried his agreement with his current wife Linda, a Puerto
Rican-German woman, was that my mother is his family and anything Ivette needs
he will help her get it, even if it means moving her into their home as her
Alzheimer's progresses. Linda agreed to have my father’s first wife, my mother,
move into her home with my father if my mother needed care. She agreed for her
husbands ex-wife to be cared for in her home. Let that sink in. That's my
machismo That’s what community restitution is for the Puerto Rican.
As the
bodies and bones and remains of our dead Puerto Rican ancestors emerge from
their graves with the water and are unearth and resisting their erasure, what
are the ways we today can create new paths for Puerto Rican family formation to
be honored and nurtured? Hunter offers a variety of ways to preserve and
reimagine codes of courtship, love, citizenship, home, and place all within a
framework that begins and ends within the African diaspora.
How are
we preparing to preserve a waterproof archive that humanizes the agency within
constraints, as Iris Lopez writes, of the AfraBoricua body in ecstasy,
survival, here. I’m no longer dreaming in Puerto Rican, I’ve been displaced
from Puerto Rico for 24 years. It’s a constant nightmare where there is no
decolonization - giving the land back to the people. I need to dream through
the rest of you because my family is actively becoming extinct as we speak. I
ask each of you today: What are your dreams for Puerto Rico and for the
preservation of family formation that our enslaved elders cherished?
Brown, Susan L., Van Hook, Jennifer, Glick, Jennifer E. (2008).
Generational Differences in Cohabitation and Marriage in the US. Popul Res Policy Rev. Oct; 27(5): 531–550.
Hunter,
Tera W. (2017). Bound In Wedlock: Slave and Free Black Marriage In the
Nineteenth Century. Belknap Press.
Gonzales,
Gilbert. (2017). Health Insurance Coverage among Puerto Rican Adults in
Same-Sex Relationships. J of Healthcare for the Poor and Underserved.
28(3). pp.
915-930.
Santesteban-Echarri, O.,
Eisenberg, E. Ruth, Bird, Hector R., Canino, Glorisa J.. Duarte, Cristiane S.
(2016). Family Structure, Transitions and Psychiatric Disorders Among Puerto
Rican Children. J Child Fam Stud. Author manuscript; available in PMC
2017 November 1.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)